Highlights From the Archives

National Desk

One of the best-known veterans of old-fashioned hard-ball politics, Dick Morris, has turned to the Internet and shaken up e-politics. Mr. Morris's method of working the Internet involves asking visitors to vote yes or no on issues featured on his Web site, which converts the votes into thousands of e-mail messages that are sent to elected officials.

November 12, 1999technologyNews

Week in Review Desk

WHEN Bill Clinton found his purported marital infidelities splashed across tabloid pages during his first run for President, he and his aides fought back furiously, challenging reporters to explain what relevance such tales about a candidate's personal life had in a political race, particularly when presented in a supermarket tabloid. But when Dick Morris, the President's chief political strategist, found himself hoisted last week in the same newspaper, and over similarly unsavory allegations -- that he carried on an affair with a call girl at one of Washington's most distinguished hotels, where he mixed moments of intimacy with revelations about White House business -- none of Mr. Clinton's aides even tried to suggest that Mr. Morris's personal life was out of bounds.

September 1, 1996weekinreviewNews

Metropolitan Desk

President Clinton's latest political guru, Dick Morris, is usually so obsessively low-profile that he might best be known as the stealth strategist. But not last night, when he stepped far, far back to his political roots to mingle with the remnants of New York's Tammany machine.

October 20, 1995nyregionNews

National Desk

First the President threw out prepared speeches and replaced them with more pugnacious ones. Then, he surprised his own party and submitted a balanced budget plan. Finally, he decided to defy precedent and broadcast campaign commercials a year and a half before the election. With each of these disconcerting developments, Democrats demanded to know why. The answer that came back was a name. The name was Dick Morris.

The Fox News Channel has declined to renew its contract with Mr. Morris, three months after he was widely derided for predicting a landslide victory for Mitt Romney in the Nov. 6 presidential election.

December 17, 2010, Friday

Dick Morris, a Fox News commentator who was an adviser to former President Bill Clinton, has put nearly $1.5 million behind 15 Republican Congressional candidates in the last week, spending more than $1 million on Monday alone. Mr. Morris has...

June 20, 2004, Sunday

OFF WITH THEIR HEADS Traitors, Crooks and Obstructionists in American Politics, Media and Business. By Dick Morris. 343 pp. New York: ReganBooks/ HarperCollins Publishers. $24.95. BIG LIES The Right-Wing Propaganda Machine and How It...

August 31, 2003, Sunday

Who is John Galt? What's new, pussycat? Is that all there is? Who shot J. R.? Who are those guys? Quo vadis? To be or not to be? Dude, where's my car? Seriously, dude, where's my car? Out of the many famous questions in the culture, we may soon...

January 19, 2003, Sunday

To the Editor: Re ''President's Risks Are Rewarded at Polls'' (news analysis, front page, Nov. 6): In the aftermath of this debacle for the Democratic Party, much will be said and written by the pundits about the reasons. Surely, the party...

November 7, 2002, Thursday

Advertising

Dick Morris Navigator

A list of resources from around the Web about Dick Morris as selected by researchers and editors of The New York Times.